Full movie description "Bone Dry":

Eddie finds himself being forced at a gunpoint, by an unseen assailant, on a dark and brutal journey through the harsh terrain of the Mojave desert. His nemesis is Jimmy, a man with an aberrant agenda; armed with a rifle, a scope, walkie-talkies and a truck, he has organized a series of ambushes and mantraps designed to push Eddie to the limits of his humanity and beyond.

Reviews of the Bone Dry

"Bone Dry" was recommended to me by a good friend and promoted as a
modest but exciting little thriller with an original setting and decent
performances. Perhaps I simply wasn't in a very good mood when I
watched it, but all I saw was a dire, derivative and overlong
cat-and-mouse thriller without any thrills. Lance Henriksen  mainly
off-screen but immediately recognizable thanks to his distinct voice 
threatens a seemingly innocent guy (Luke Goss) at gunpoint and forces
him to talk a long walk in the Mojave Desert. Eddie's journey on foot
through the hot sand is inhumanly cruel and full of ambushes and death
traps, while his unseen assailant follows him around in a jeep and
armed with a sniper rifle. Director Brett A. Hart's script tries very
hard to make us believe that Eddie is just a poor traveler at the wrong
place at the wrong time, whereas Jimmy  the voice on the walkie talkie
 is a sadist and merciless villain without proper motivation for his
acts. But it's more than obvious right from the beginning that Eddie
isn't a randomly targeted victim and that he probably deserves every
humiliating and agonizing thing that overcomes him. Their excursion in
the Mojave Desert quickly becomes tedious and repetitive, and
personally I felt the urge to fast-forward towards the predictable
"surprise ending". There isn't much character study going on and the
vile interactions between the cat and the mouse are dull and pointless.
Lance Henriksen's voice gives away a terrifically menacing performance
and there are notable cameo appearances by Dee Wallace-Stone and Tommy
Lister, but otherwise I can't find any good arguments to recommend this
mundane and forgettable flick.